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葱烧海参
cōng shāo hǎi shēn

Braised Sea Cucumber with Scallion

Quick Info

Flavor
Rich, savory, and deeply umami. The sea cucumber absorbs the caramelized scallion and soy braising sauce like a sponge, creating an intensely savory experience similar to a fine mushroom reduction.
Texture
Gelatinous and slippery with a gentle chew — imagine a firm jelly that bounces slightly between your teeth, bathed in a velvety sauce
Spice Level
Not spicy
Temperature
Served Hot
Cuisine
Shandong 鲁菜
Cooking
Braised
Main Ingredients
Fish

Ingredients

Rehydrated sea cucumberScallions (large)Soy sauceOyster sauceSugarCooking wineGingerChicken stockCornstarchVegetable oil

Allergens

Confirmed

SoyShellfish

Possible

Gluten

These ingredients may vary by restaurant. Ask your server to confirm.

The Story

Sea cucumber is one of the most prized luxury ingredients in Chinese cuisine, and Shandong province — with its long coastline facing the Yellow Sea — has been the epicenter of sea cucumber cooking for centuries. This particular preparation, braising with caramelized scallions, is considered the definitive way to serve sea cucumber in all of China. It is a dish that appears at important banquets, business dinners, and celebrations. The seemingly simple combination of scallion and sea cucumber is actually a masterclass in Shandong cuisine’s philosophy: let the technique elevate the ingredient.

What to Expect

Dark, glossy sea cucumber segments arrive in a rich brown sauce flecked with deeply caramelized scallion pieces. The sea cucumber itself has almost no flavor on its own — it is essentially a delivery vehicle for the magnificent sauce. The texture is the real star: gelatinous, bouncy, and unlike anything in Western cuisine. The closest comparison might be a very firm gummy bear, but savory. The scallion sauce is sweet, deeply savory, and impossibly rich, clinging to every surface of the sea cucumber.

Tips

Sea cucumber is valued in Chinese culture for its supposed health benefits and its luxurious texture, not its flavor. Approach it as a textural experience rather than a taste-driven one. If the gelatinous texture is difficult for you, focus on how beautifully it carries the sauce. This is an expensive dish — expect to pay significantly more than most other items on the menu. It is worth trying at least once for the cultural experience alone.

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